Strong intermolecular
electronic coupling and well-ordered molecular
arrangements enable efficient transport of both charge carriers and
excitons in semiconducting π-conjugated molecular solids. Thus,
molecular heteroepitaxy to form crystallized donor–acceptor
molecular interfaces potentially leads to a novel strategy for creating
efficient organic optoelectronic devices via the concomitance of these
two requirements. In the present study, the crystallographic and electronic
structures of a heteroepitaxial molecular interface, perfluoropentacene
(PFP, C22F14) grown on pentacene single crystals
(Pn-SCs, C22H14), were determined by means of
grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) and angle-resolved ultraviolet
photoelectron spectroscopy (ARUPS), respectively. GIXD revealed that
PFP uniquely aligned its primary axis along the [11̅0] axis
of crystalline pentacene to form well-crystallized overlayers. Valence
band dispersion (at least 0.49 eV wide) was successfully resolved
by ARUPS. This indicated a significant transfer integral between the
frontier molecular orbitals of the nearest-neighbor PFP molecules.